HDO ice detected toward an isolated low-mass protostar with JWST
Katerina Slavicinska, {\L}ukasz Tychoniec, Mar\'ia Gabriela Navarro, Ewine F. van Dishoeck, John J. Tobin, Martijn L. van Gelder, Yuan Chen, A. C. Adwin Boogert, W. Blake Drechsler, Henrik Beuther, Alessio Caratti o Garatti, S. Thomas Megeath, Pamela Klaassen, Leslie W. Looney

TL;DR
This study reports the first detection of HDO ice toward a low-mass protostar using JWST, providing insights into water's chemical evolution and inheritance in star-forming regions.
Contribution
It presents the first JWST detection of HDO ice in a low-mass protostar, measuring the HDO/H2O ratio and comparing it across different star-forming environments.
Findings
HDO/H2O ice ratio is similar to ratios in warm inner cores of protostellar envelopes.
The ratio is higher than in comets and clustered star-forming regions.
Supports inheritance of unaltered water ice in protoplanetary disks.
Abstract
Water is detected in environments representing every stage of star and solar system formation, but its chemical evolution throughout these stages remains poorly constrained. Deuterium ratios offer a means of probing chemical links between water in different cosmic regions because of their sensitivity to physicochemical conditions. Here, we present the first detection of the 4.1 m HDO ice feature with JWST toward a low-mass protostar, L1527 IRS, which may eventually grow to a sun-like mass. We measure an ice HDO/HO ratio of 4.410, where the reported error is dominated by uncertainties in continuum definition and ice band strengths. This fraction is similar to the gas HDO/HO ratios measured in the warm (100 K) inner cores of other low-mass protostellar envelopes and protoplanetary disks found in comparably isolated star-forming regions.…
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